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Jethro Tull My God Guitar Tab

#----------------------------------PLEASE NOTE---------------------------------#
#This file is the author's own work and represents their interpretation of the #
#song. You may only use this file for private study, scholarship, or research. #
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------##
From: BROCKMAN@udavxb.oca.udayton.edu
MY GOD
Jethro Tull
from: Aqualung, 1971
Transcribed by:
brockman@udavxb.oca.udayton.edu (Bob Brockman)
Corrections welcome (please email) - Thanks.
Notes:
1. On the Aqualung album, a lot of the guitar is covered over
by the strong piano parts. I gleaned most of the guitar
background from a bootleg recording on which this cut
consists pretty much of Ian Anderson and acoustic guitar.
Might be a little different from what's played on the
album.
2. My naming of a couple of the more bizarre chords might be
off; if my ignorance is showing, someone let me know
(gently) where I'm all wet.
3. The lyrics below are different in 2-3 places from the ones
printed in the album liner notes; this happens in spots
where I'm pretty sure the liner notes are off.
Intro:
e|----------------|--------------------||
B|----------------|--------------------||
G|----------------|--------------------||
D|---7-----------7|----7---7---7--5-h7-||
A|-0--------------|--0---0---0---------||
E|----------------|--------------------||
let ring | repeat several times,
at increasing tempo
Am B7/A
e|----------------|----------------|
B|-5--------------|-4--------------|
G|-5--------------|-4--------------|
D|-7--------------|-7--------------|
A|-0--------------|-0--------------|
E|----------------|----------------| Repeat to this point 2x
finger pick in let ring
this position
for a while...
e|---------------------------------------------------|
B|---------------------------------------------------|
G|------------------------------2--------2-s4--------|
D|------------------------0-2-3--------3---s5----5---|
A|-0---0------------0-2-3----------------------------|
E|---------------------------------------------------|
let ring
Verse 1:
Part 1: This part can either be strummed (muting both E and e)
or finger-picked. The Aqualung album version seems to
be mostly strumming, but it's almost overpowered by the
piano part once that starts. On the bootleg, Anderson
finger-picks it, and it sounds really nice. If you do
finger-pick it, throwing in a little of the high 'e'
string sounds good -- play with it and see.
Am B7addE/A DmaddE/A E7/A Am
e|--0-------------------------4-----0-----| Repeated twice as intro,
B|-10--0------------6---------5----10-----| before piano line begins.
G|--9--8------------7---------4-----9-----| Then repeated throughout
D|-10--7------------7---------0----10-----| first part of each verse.
A|--0--0--------0---0---------0-----0-----| See below for timing.
E|----------------------------------------|
Here's how it lines up with the lyrics:
Am B7 Dm E7 Am Am B7
People, what have you done
Dm E7 Am Am B7 Dm E7 Am
Locked Him in His golden cage
Am B7 Dm E7 Am Am B7
Made Him bend to your religion
Dm E7 Am Am B7 Dm E7 Am B7 Dm E7
Him resurrected from the grave
Part 2: Chords, all strummed:
D G
He is the God of nothing,
C G Am B7 Dm E7 Am Am B7 Dm E7
If that's all that you can see
D G
You are the God of everything,
C G D CaddD D ( CaddD = XX0030 )
He's inside you and me.
Verse 2:
Am B7 Dm E7 Am Am B7
So lean upon Him gently
Dm E7 Am
And don't call on him to save
Riff #1
e|--------------------------| This riff replaces the Am - B7addE/A etc.
B|--------------------------| chord progression for the remainder of
G|--------------------------| the verse. There are a couple of minor
D|--------------------------| variations here and there, very simple.
A|--7--6------5-3-----------|
E|---------------5-0-3-5----|
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
(keep playing Riff #1 here ...) D C
you from your social graces, and the sins you used to waive.
D G
The bloody Church of England,
C G (Riff #1 again)
in chains of history,
D G
requests your earthly presence
C G D C D
at the vicarage for tea.
Solo section: (sorry for the lack of detail here, but I'm pretty lame at
picking out solos note for note)
Lead-in to flute solo:
Chord progression is: Am E D C G (2x)
Solo riff here is blues scale rooted at fret 5 through Am-E-D,
then up to fret 8 at the change to C, etc.
Flute solo:
Background chord progression is: A E D/F# G
Gregorian chant section:
(No instrumental part here.)
Next, repeat same chord pattern used during flute solo: A E D/F# G
Then return to: Am B7 Dm E to lead in to verse 3
Verse 3
(Same as Verse 2; start quietly, then switch to Riff #1 on "crucifix"):
And the graven image you-know-who,
with His plastic crucifix,
Confuses me as to who and where and why,
and to how He gets His kicks.
Confessing to the endless sin,
the endless whining sounds.
You'll be praying 'til next Thursday,
to all the Gods that you can count.
Repeat lead-in section to flute solo (same chord pattern, different solo)
End with:
Am B7 Dm E7 Am B7 Dm E7 Am B7 Dm E7 Am B7

Source: http://www.guitarmasta.net/j/jethro_tull/352795.html

Tab Discussion, Comments, and Critiques
 
 
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Jonathan
Average
#1 by Jonathan at Sep 28, 2007 at 5:26 AM EST
PREACH IT YO! Jethro Tull..was before my time...my dad liked them alot. I started getting really into them not too long ago. This song is probably one of my favs. My band wants to cover LOCOMOTIVE BREATH!
 
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Henry
Wanna Be
#2 by Henry at Sep 29, 2007 at 2:53 AM EST
Jethro Tull kicks ass! I saw them play this tune at Massey Hall (a nice, close-up venue) in Toronto about 10 years ago, and it was SPOT ON the recording NOTE for NOTE. Ian is an amazing entertainer with a real stage presence, and his flute solo was POWERFUL and SPELLBINDING! When he introduced the song, he said that he now thought it was a bit "immature". I think Ian believes in what Jesus stood for (Tull does have a Christmas Album), but STICKS IT to the established church leaders who ABUSE his good name. Jesus himself said "the first shall be last, and the last shall be first" and so the theme of TRUE spirituality LIVES ON. 1
 
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Carter
Wanna Be
#3 by Carter Wilson at Sep 29, 2007 at 5:28 PM EST
My God is a very touching and personal song. Good music and message on the group's part. The Aqualung album is a great achievement. It's kinda ironic how it is Jethro Tull's best album musically and commercially, yet frontman Ian Anderson though that it was a very immature and technically flawed album by his standards. Go figure.
 
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Jason
Average
#4 by Jason herbie at Sep 29, 2007 at 8:21 PM EST
Aqualung is diefinately a pro-God, anti-church album, I will agree to that! This is such a great song, great band, Jethro Tull is very underrated. I love the fact that they have a flute.
 
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sidvic
Average
#5 by sidvic at Sep 30, 2007 at 8:51 AM EST
Wiclo6, PhiladelphiaEagles, and Freddieismyidol got the meaning of the song right.
 
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Sam
Wanna Be
#6 by Sam Kearley at Sep 30, 2007 at 6:49 PM EST
good luck with that...two years later.. anyhow...this song is great..apparently about their discontent with religion as it was in england and everything it was based on....look it up...interesting history...
 
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pharaoh shane
Rhythm Player
#7 by pharaoh shane at Sep 30, 2007 at 7:21 PM EST
I'm working on a set of lyrics about the commercialization of religion and its takeover by extremists (Muslims AND Christians, and others too). I started before hearing this album, but this has certainly given me ideas. If I only had a band to give it to...
 
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Alex
Average
#8 by Alex pischera at Oct 1, 2007 at 7:40 PM EST
i agree with wiclo. and yes, this is a touching song.
 
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Julian
Average
#9 by Julian . at Oct 2, 2007 at 4:28 AM EST
Ian always introduced this song as "A blues for the man upstairs". Its very pro-god, but it criticized the corrupt organized religeon that fixes his image in a way that believing anything else is impossible. people can't formulate thier own opinions about god because they are brought up in thier specific religeon and are taught that "this is the way it is, no ifs, ands, or buts. If you don't agree, you are wrong, and you are going to be nice and warm in hell for all eternity." Ian felt that god was inside of all of us, and we should communicate with Him how we see fit, not how the church tells us. Kick ass song, second best flute work in any of their songs behind the solo in Locomotive Breath. This one may even be better. Ian plays the flute so well, that I wish i had known about them about 6 years ago when i had a chance to learn an instrument in grade school. Just a tinny little fact, Ian only learned how to play the flute 6 months before the bands 1st album came out.
 
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Mike
Wanna Be
#10 by Mike at Oct 4, 2007 at 7:54 AM EST
I think it's about how people have manipulated the concept of god to gain power and control people. The "God" and "He" in this song sounds more like a Deistic god.
 
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Rich
Average
#11 by Rich Frazer at Oct 4, 2007 at 9:03 PM EST
We have all packaged God into a nice neat worshipping place This song reminds us that He is in all people, places and things and the we dont have to be in a particular place to worship Him. Part of the "Aqualung" conceptual album.
 
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Snap! Crackle!
Average
#12 by Snap! Crackle! Josh!! waldenmaier at Oct 5, 2007 at 2:24 PM EST
That flute solo will blow you away. Make sure you try and maintain consciousness while you listen to it. It's unbelievable.